The Internet is a strange and wonderful place.
Say you're an up-and-coming singer-songwriter and you're looking for an audience. You've got an active presence on social media, a deal with a major label and a proven sound that, while a little dated, probably would have sold reasonably well if it had come out around the peak of the late-'90s/early-'00s bubblegum pop era.
Oh, except you don't really exist. Your supposed label has never heard of you (because you don't exist) and your songs are pretty much all Jessica Simpson songs. No, not covers of Jessica Simpson songs — actual recordings that were released on Columbia Records in 2001 and newly posted to iTunes, Amazon, Spotify and Tidal with new titles. Because you don't exist.
That's the story of Lucia Cole, as far as I can tell. I say "as far as I can tell" because, well, Lucia Cole seems not to exist and is, at this moment, quickly vanishing from the Internet. But on May 28, an artist by that name released an album called Innocence on iTunes, supposedly through Republic Records, which is owned by Universal Music Group, one of the three remaining major record labels.
Earlier this week, the blog
Pop Culture Died In 2009
When a colleague tipped me off to the story yesterday, the first thing I did was listen to Cole's songs side by side with the Jessica Simpson songs, which are easy to identify, despite the fact that they're all album cuts rather than singles, because the song titles are identical or remarkably similar: Simpson's "What's It Gonna Be" from the 2001 album Irresistible became Cole's "Gonna Be"; Simpson's "For Your Love" became Cole's "Your Love"; "Forever In Your Eyes" and "His Eye Is On The Sparrow" became "Forever In Your Eyes" and "His Eye Is On The Sparrow."
I called Republic Records, the supposed home of Lucia Cole, at 4:00 p.m. To zero surprise, a spokesperson confirmed that nobody by that name is signed to the label. By 8:30 p.m., all of Cole's music had been removed from iTunes. It was, at the time this was written, still available on
Amazon
(UPDATE at 7:15 a.m. EDT, July 18: Amazon has removed Cole's music from its store.)
Cole's Wikipedia page
was deleted
For the last six weeks, whoever uploaded those songs has been committing a theft of intellectual property so brazen it made me wonder how the album could possibly have made it into the iTunes store without some kind of red flag going up. SoundCloud employs software that can scan uploaded music and flag songs that sound too similar to copyrighted material already in the database.
I emailed Apple to ask about iTunes' process for verifying content and label affiliations, but have received no official comment yet.
We shouldn't be surprised
- Lucia Cole's ironically named Twitter feed, @trulylucia, has more than 64,000 followers.
- There's at least one
interview
- Shaquille O'Neal
endorsed her album
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